Sunday, September 4, 2011

Pathologies of Power

Wow, it has been a seriously long time since I have posted. I have completed my first OB clinical and now in Med/Surg (working on a post to recap). I will start clinicals next week. Right now I am starting to do some research for the independent study abroad I am planning on doing next summer. One of the books recommended by CHFI (the organization that I am doind the study abroad with) suggested a few books to read. One, Pathologies of Power is one I am reading now. I just read this last night and it really struck me and I wanted to share:

In this increasingly interconnected world (the world that is satisfying to us is the same world that is utterly devastating to them"), we must understand that what happens to the poor is never divorced from the actions of the powerful. Certainly, people who define themselves as poor may control their own destinies to some extent. But control of lives is related to control of land, systems of production, and the formal political and legal structures in which lives are enmeshed. With time, both wealth and control have become increasingly concentrated in the hands of a few. The opposite trend is desired by those working for social justice.

Image from Amazon.com